Superstars and renaissance men: specialization, market size and the income distribution

Abstract

A general equilibrium model of individual specialization is presented in which agents trade off the productivity and price implications of producing a narrower range of goods. Agents with highly specific skills turn out to benefit most from large markets. The model is able to replicate features of the long-term evolution of the US income distribution, with specialization-biased technical change and the increase in employed population playing key roles. Among the results is that, at least along one dimension of ability, the skill premium is increasing in the relative supply of skills

Topics:
HF Commerce, HD Industries. Land use. Labor

Publisher: Centre for Economic Performance, London School of Economics and Political Science